PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Healing of stoma after magnetic biliary-enteric anastomosis in canine peritonitis models.

Journal:
Chinese medical sciences journal = Chung-kuo i hsueh k'o hsueh tsa chih
Year:
2014
Authors:
Li, Jian-Hui et al.
Affiliation:
1.Department of Surgical Oncology · China
Species:
dog

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assese the healing of stoma after magnetic anastomosis for the reconstruction of biliary-enteric continuity under severe inflammation. METHODS: Acute bile duct injury was constructed as a bile peritonitis model in mongrel dogs (n=32). Magnetic anastomosis (group A, n=16) and traditional suture anastomosis (group B, n=16) were performed to reconstruct the biliary-enteric continuity in one stage. Half of the dogs in each group were euthanized on the 30th postoperative day, and the other half on the 90th postoperative day to harvest the stoma region. The healing conditions of the stoma after the 2 anastomotic approaches were observed with naked eyes, under light microscope and scanning electron microscope. RESULTS: The stoma leakage rate (50% versus 0% on the 30th postoperative day, 37.5% versus 12.5% on the 90th postoperative day, both P<0.05) and stenosis degree (13.9%&#xb1;0.3% versus 7.1%&#xb1;0.3% on the 30th postoperative day, 17.2%&#xb1;0.4% versus 9.4%&#xb1;0.4% on the 90th postoperative day, both P<0.01) were significantly higher in group B than in group A. Compared with traditional manual anastomoses, the histological analysis under light and electron microscope showed a more continuous stoma with more regular epithelium proliferation and collagen arrangement, less inflammation in group A. CONCLUSIONS: Magnetic anastomosis stent ensures better healing of the stoma even under the circumstance of severe inflammation.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24998230/